Dutch to consider HIGH-potency WEED as dangerous as cocaine and ecstacy
The government justifies marijuana prohibition by upholding the Controlled Substance Act. The CSA was enacted into law by the Congress of the United States as Title II of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970. It claims marijuana is a Schedule I Controlled Substance, meaning that it has a high potential for abuse, has no accepted medical use and there is a lack of accepted safety for using marijuana under medical supervision. Sure, WA and CO have outright legalized weed for adult recreational use, but those 2 states and 18 others currently recognize marijuana’s medical use. So, not only do several states recognize marijuana as medicine, believe it or not, the federal government does as well. And in some cases they actually provide it as medicine…at tax payers’ expense.
The Compassionate Investigational New Drug program, or Compassionate IND, is a program that allows patients to use National Institute on Drug Abuse-provided medical marijuana grown at a pot farm at the University of Mississippi. It all began in 1978 after Robert Randall brought on a lawsuit against the Food and Drug Administration, Drug Enforcement Administration, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Department of Justice, and the Department of Health, Education & Welfare (Randall v. U.S). Back in 1976, Randall, who suffered with glaucoma, successfully used the Common Law doctrine of necessity to argue against charges of marijuana cultivation because it was deemed a medical necessity (U.S. v. Randall).
The criminal charges against Randall were dropped and following a petition filed by Randall in May 1976, federal agencies began providing him with FDA-approved access to government supplies of medical marijuana, becoming the first American to receive marijuana for the treatment of a medical disorder.
Of course when Randall went public with his story, the government tried to prevent his legal access to marijuana. This led to the ‘78 lawsuit where Randall was represented pro bono by a big law firm. Twenty-four hours after filing the suit, the federal agencies requested an out-of-court settlement, which resulted in Randall gaining prescriptive access to marijuana through a federal pharmacy.
The settlement in Randall v. U.S. became the legal basis for the FDA’s Compassionate IND program. Initially only available to patients afflicted by marijuana-responsive disorders and orphan drugs, the concept was expanded to include HIV-positive patients during the peak of the AIDS epidemic of the mid-1980s. It was during this time the seeds were planted for the modern medical marijuana movement that gave way to California’s landmark 1996 Proposition 215 that legalized medical marijuana in the state. But, due to the growing number of AIDS patients throughout the late 1980s and the resulting numbers of patients who joined the Compassionate IND program, the George H. W. Bush administration ended the program in 1992. At its peak, the program had thirty active patients.
Irv’s almost famous. He’s been featured in magazines, on TV, and has a book out, all due to Multiple Congenital Cartilaginous Exostoses, a painful disorder that causes bone tumors to form at Irv’s joints, stretching the surrounding tendons and veins, making movement almost impossible. He’s had 30 tumors removed in six operations. He still has 200 tumors, some too small to remove, yet in the 30 years he has been smoking marijuana, he says, he has not had a new tumor.
So here’s a guy, buy his book here, who smokes ten joints a day as government-provided medicine…and has for more than two and a half decades…who personifies the federal government’s contradictory stance on marijuana. Talk about a blunt message.
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the USA and DEA are LYING and they KNOW POT SHOULD BE LEGAL. STOP believing the media and OPEN YOUR EYES!